Pubdate: Wed, 05 Sep 2007 Source: Washington Post (DC) Page: A10 Copyright: 2007 The Washington Post Company Contact: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491 Author: Juan Forero, Washington Post Foreign Service Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Colombia Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) NEW CHAPTER IN DRUG TRADE In Wake of Colombia's U.S.-Backed Disarmament Process, Ex-Paramilitary Fighters Regroup Into Criminal Gangs BOGOTA, Colombia -- Colombia's cocaine trade has never been controlled by a single cast of characters. In the 1980s, Pablo Escobar and other flamboyant cocaine cowboys, wielding billions of dollars and armies of hit men, nearly brought the state to its knees. Their deaths ushered in more discreet groups, so-called baby cartels, that outsourced trafficking and murder to gangs. Then came a paramilitary force that relied on cocaine to fund a war against Marxist rebels, a bloody phase the government says ended with the disarmament of militias last year. Now, in the latest evolution of Colombia's unremitting drug trade, new criminal gangs led by former mid-level paramilitary commanders have surfaced in about half of Colombia's 32 states. Authorities here estimate that the groups -- steeped in violence and outfitted like armies -- have a combined force of anywhere from 3,000 to 5,000 fighters. As many as 17 percent of them are said to be former paramilitary members. Their emergence -- outlined in interviews in two regions heavily affected by drug trafficking and in recent reports by the Organization of American States, the Colombian government and the United Nations -- is undermining a demobilization that authorities tout as having removed 32,000 fighters from a long, shadowy war. "The danger is that these groups have a big fountain of revenue that comes from narco-trafficking and permits them to develop, recruit people and to continue affecting the population," said Sergio Caramagna, chief of an OAS team that monitored the three-year disarmament process. The OAS document and other reports conclude that the new groups do not have a central command or the national reach or political objectives of the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia, the powerful coalition of paramilitary groups that was officially demobilized. That organization, known by the Spanish initials AUC, worked closely with Colombian army units and corrupt politicians to erode support for leftist guerrillas, launching campaigns that killed thousands of civilians. The overarching objective of the new groups is to control Colombia's lucrative cocaine trade, and they confront those individuals or groups that stand in their way. At the same time, some of the groups are using the same tactics that paramilitary groups were known for: engaging guerrillas in combat, targeting rights workers and displacing peasants from farmland. Political analysts say the emergence of the groups happened because the government failed to adequately track mid-level commanders, some of whom posed as low-level fighters during demobilization ceremonies. Dozens, if not hundreds, of those mid-level commanders saw an opportunity to obtain the power and influence they had never had, said Ivan Duque, a former paramilitary commander, and Rafael Garcia, a former intelligence operative convicted of collaborating with paramilitary groups. Those commanders were then able to appeal to rank-and-file fighters, who never viewed the government stipend and workshops that came with the disarmament as a viable alternative to a life of crime. "These guys don't know anything except how to fire a gun, how to kill people," said Garcia. "And as long as they don't find jobs, they'll do what they know how to do." In the northeastern state of Cesar, where politicians and paramilitary fighters formed an alliance to raid state coffers and rig elections, little appears to have changed. After the AUC demobilized, a group calling itself the Black Eagles entered the southern part of the state with 150 heavily armed men in December 2005 and massacred villagers. Reports show that group and others have since assumed control of the lucrative cocaine pipeline through the porous Venezuelan border. Like the AUC, the new groups have also tried to influence politics in the region ahead of next month's local elections, said Alejandra Barrios, director of the Bogota-based Electoral Observation Mission, which monitors elections. In August, one politician was slain, and others have been threatened. "They call them new groups but to me they're the same old groups -- what's new is their name," said Alfonso Palacio, a mayoral candidate in the village of La Jagua, who says he's been targeted by the groups. Government officials say the percentage of former AUC fighters in the new groups remains low. And Gen. Oscar Naranjo, chief of the National Police, said in an interview that the police, the army and federal prosecutors have arrested 1,700 of the fighters since March 2006. "For us it's a priority to combat and neutralize them," he said. American officials, while recognizing the problem, said the new groups cannot be compared to the AUC of old, which the Bush administration says was dismantled with American aid. "Obviously it's disappointing that everybody doesn't demobilize or the groups are able to continue to traffic and to harm individuals in Colombia," John P. Walters, the White House drug policy chief, said by phone from Washington. "But on the other hand, again the enormous achievement was to reduce the power and the capacity of what was operating before the demobilization process began." Rafael Pardo, an author and former Colombian senator, says the government has underplayed the nature of the threat. He and others have said the percentage of former paramilitary fighters in the emerging groups could be much higher than the government contends, because it's likely that the AUC never actually came close to having 32,000 members. Meanwhile, the International Crisis Group, a Brussels-based organization that studies conflicts worldwide, said in a recent lengthy report that in some cases, the commitment of government forces to fighting the groups has been low because of drug-related corruption or because the priority remains fighting the guerrillas. "The new generation of paramilitaries are the new face of the drug-trafficking business and the evolution of paramilitaries into a purely drug-trafficking organization," said Jeremy McDermott, author of the Crisis Group report. "But it's equally dangerous to institutions because the corruptive power of drug trafficking is as relevant as ever." The developments are being watched closely by Democrats and some Republicans in Washington, who have already held up a free trade agreement with Colombia because of concerns over rights abuses and what they say has been a flawed demobilization process. "The idea of the demobilization was good, but the fact that they could so easily regroup and get weapons, I've found a concern," said Sen. Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.), who chairs the Senate Appropriations subcommittee on foreign operations. Among the most troubled regions is the sparsely populated state of Nario, in the southwest. There, new groups have emerged to fight for control of drug-trafficking corridors while threatening rights workers and indigenous leaders, whom they accuse of ties to rebels. "They want to intimidate, to shut us up because we're fighting for our rights," said Robinson Pai, a leader in the Awa community. Though 689 fighters from a paramilitary unit known as the Liberators of the South demobilized on July 30, 2005, OAS investigators found little change in the dynamics of the conflict in Nari?o. The number of homicides shot up from 491 in 2004 to 797 in 2006. In interviews in the softly rolling mountains around the town of Egido, officials and poor farmers said the groups go by several names: New Generation, Black Eagles, the Black Hand and the Machos. But it's believed that their leadership, perhaps more than anywhere else, has remained in the hands of old paramilitary commanders. One powerful warlord, Carlos Mario Jimnez, had participated in the demobilization, but authorities charged that he continued directing paramilitary groups from jail. President Alvaro Uribe recently ended special privileges that would have afforded him a light sentence for admitting to his crimes, and the United States is now preparing to extradite him. "The government insists that the paramilitaries have demobilized and do not operate," said Nancy Villota, a lawyer with one of Nario's main human rights groups. "Our experience shows that they've not come back because they've simply never gone anywhere. They've always been here." of - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake